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Making it Count: Collaborative strategies that improve outcomes for families at the
intersection of multiple systems
Nancy K. Young, NCSACWCarole Johnson, Minnesota
Christine Sabino Kiesel, New YorkRobert Long, Maine
Strengthening Agency Systems and Workforce DevelopmentDecember 12-13, 2007
2
Objectives
To share knowledge across systems the three systems: substance abuse, child welfare, dependency court
To promote understanding of cross systems issues and to advance cross-system collaboration
To increase awareness of cross systems issues and approaches
To facilitate communication across systems To provide technical assistance to State and
county teams To improve outcomes for children and adults
Technical Assistance
3
Differences in values and perceptions of primary client
Timing differences in service systems
Knowledge gaps among staff working in the systems
Lack of tools for effective engagement in services
Intervention and prevention needs of children
Lack of effective communication
Data and information gaps
Categorical and rigid funding streams as well as services and treatment gaps
Frequently Cited Barriers
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Develop principles for working together
Create on-going dialogues and efficient communication
Develop cross-training opportunities
Improve screening, assessment and monitoring practice and protocols
Develop funding strategies to improve timely treatment access
Expand prevention services to children
Develop improved cross-system data collection
Suggested Strategies
5
Report to Congress in response to the Adoption and Safe Families Act
Five National Goals Established
▪ Building Collaborative Relationships
▪ Assuring Timely Access to Comprehensive Substance Abuse Treatment Services
▪ Improving our Ability to Engage and Retain Clients in Care and to Support Ongoing Recovery
▪ Enhancing Children’s Services
▪ Filling Information Gaps
Blending Perspectives and Building Common Ground
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Ten Element Framework
Collaborative Values Inventory
Collaborative Capacity Instrument
Matrix of Progress in System Linkages
Screening and Assessment for Family Engagement, Retention and Recovery — SAFERR
Collaborative Practice and Policy Tools
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Underlying values Information systems
Screening and assessment Training and staff development
Client engagement and retention in care
Budgeting and program sustainability
Services to children Working with related agencies
Joint accountability and shared outcome
Building community supports
10 Element Framework
8
Collaboration practice and policy tools
Information and sharing of models
Expert consultation and research
Development of issue-specific products
Monographs, white papers, fact sheets
Training resources
On-line courses, training materials
Longer-term strategic planning and development of protocols and practice models
Technical Assistance
9
Information and Sharing of Models
• Materials• Publications• Referrals to experts• Peer to peer consultation• Involves identifying and using
existing knowledge, materials, products, and resources
• Collecting and disseminating information from sites who have implemented practice and policy changes
Expert Consultation and Research
• Background research/data analysis
• Conference calls with expert consultants
• Analyzing CCI/CVI scores• Annotated bibliography and
custom literature searches• Compiling resources and data
on specific topics (e.g. peer mentors, methamphetamine)
Technical Assistance
10
Development of Issue-Specific Products
• Materials• Publications• Referrals• Involves identifying and using
existing knowledge, materials, products, and resources
• Collecting and disseminating information from sites
Training and Facilitation
• Group Facilitation• Conference Presentation• Legislative or commissioner
hearings or meetings• On-site training• Web-based training courses
with CEUs• Training curricula and
materials
Technical Assistance
11
In-Depth Technical Assistance
• Application and acceptance process• 15 month program facilitated by a
Consultant Liaison• Sets priorities for practice and policy
changes• Develops protocols and implementation
plans
Technical Assistance
In-Depth Technical AssistanceRegional Partnership Grants and In-Depth Technical Assistance Sites
Tribal Governments
County Government
Regional Partnership Grantee
Discussion
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1. How can multiple systems collaboratively establish priorities for achieving better outcomes for the families they mutually serve?
2. How do you sustain cross-system collaboration in the face of political climate change, budget cuts, and other factors that are outside your control?
3. What are the most important lessons you've learned to help you make the best uses of your time, energy, money and stakeholders to accomplish your goals?
4. What should jurisdictions that are seeking to develop collaborative relationships avoid in order to be successful?
NEW YORK
Environmental Context
Existing Collaboration Between ACS-OASAS
CFSR Program Improvement Plan
Statewide Family Treatment Courts
Collocation Project (OCFS-OASAS) Beginning
Local County Child Welfare Collaborative Groups
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What We Accomplished
Develop Collaborative Guide (Values, Screening to Discharge, Services)
Develop Cross System Training Plan (includes marketing and use of Guide)
Sharing Success Conference
Strengthened Collaborations
16
Bringing in other partners (OTDA)
Broad system involvement in workgroups
Be willing to hang tough and regroup
Communication, communication
Funding (Cross Systems)
17
Creative Solutions We Employed to Overcome Hurdles
OTDA Temporary Assistance Screening and other services
Redefine core competencies for workers
Need for statewide interagency database
Connect IDTA to other initiatives
Have ideas pre-prepared for funding
18
Lessons Learned
Post-IDTA: Where We’re Headed from Here
Early 2008 teleconference
CIP Cross Systems Training
Develop training on Collaborative Guide
Develop laminated checklists on core issues
19
MINNESOTA
Environmental Context
Child Welfare Reform Implementation Child Protection Differential Response Continuum Children’s Justice Initiative
Priority due to presence of overlap between AOD and Child Safety Desire to improve state and local collaboration to
achieve: Earlier engagement of parents in assessment, treatment
and recovery Improved practice through cross-system collaboration Increased flexibility in individualized planning and
treatment services Improved training on overlap impact of AOD and child
safety concerns 21
What We Accomplished
Successful Collaboration between Courts, Chemical Health, CPS, and Parents Shared Values and Principles Enhanced County and Tribal engagement Development of State and Local Advisory Team
Structures
Review and Research
Parent Focus Groups and Parent Partner Handbook
Catch the Vision – Through the Eyes of the Child Best Practice Tool Kit
Plans for continued success – training, evaluation, and sustainability plans
22
Parent Feedback Highlights
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Use an approach that is collaborative, culturally competent, family-centered and strengths-based
Deliver interventions and services that engage – not alienate - the parent to make life improvements
Work and talk together as systems to be consistent and keep the focus on AOD and needed services
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Minimize the seemingly endless, confusing and often conflicting stream of rules, requirements and paperwork that parents identify as barriers
Design services that reduce the need to separate the family for the purposes of treatment and recovery
Recognize and include fathers in the intervention and recovery process and focus on reparation of father-child relationships
Parent Feedback Highlights
Creative Solutions We Employed to Overcome Hurdles
Needed accountable key staff Established Tri-team and Core team members
Assigned project lead with continuation of key staff and advisory team structure
Needed honest and effective dedication of resources Established mutual cooperation between division
directors of three entities
Creation of living shared values and principles used to implement and assure project support and resources
25
Needed better communication and less misunderstandings Engage and Involve Parents
Clarity of roles and responsibilities
Created communication plan
Relied upon mutual accountability through a parallel process
26
Creative Solutions We Employed to Overcome Hurdles
Lessons Learned
Collaborate with consistency and honesty between primary stakeholders
Identify best practices and capacities within own state
Embrace state/county/tribal relationships as strengths rather than challenges
Assure partnership with representatives from communities of color and specifically persons from Indian Country
Assure recommended strategies respond to race and culture needs of families and communities
27
Post-IDTA: Where We are Today
Shared FTE between Courts and DHS for continued project leadership
Expansion of technical assistance for counties and tribes to implement tool kit strategies and further team building
Conducted 1st CJI-AOD Team Annual Survey
Encouraging expansion of FDTC and Recovery Specialist practices
Implementation of cross training plan, statewide Connections Matter Child Protection Conference , annual regional lead judges meetings; First formal in-state FDTC training set for January/March 2008
Continual pursuit of new funding28
MAINE
Environmental Context
• Following a high profile child death in 2001, a study into the circumstances surrounding this tragedy conducted by the Muskie Institute recommended to the Legislature’s Joint Standing Committee on Health and Human Services to establish the Child Welfare/Substance Abuse Committee.
• The Committee is chaired by the Directors of the Office of Child and Family Services and the Office of Substance Abuse; in 2006, the Chief Justice of the District Court joined the administrative leadership of the Committee. Research and staff support has been provided by the Muskie Institute.
• The Committee researched, piloted, and/or implemented various systems linkage strategies
– Out-stationed substance abuse worker– Cross training and professional development– Family Treatment Drug Courts
• In 2004, it focused upon screening as the necessary first step.30
What We Accomplished
• The Committee researched and reviewed screening instruments; it chose the UNCOPE screening tool because it met the criteria of being reliable, brief, and required minimal training.
• Pilot sites provided uneven results, leading to an administrative decision to implement universal screening through policy.
31
What We Accomplished
• The implementation strategy included:– Regional cross-training for child welfare and substance abuse
providers and developed a Train-the-Trainers network for training child welfare staff in each regional office;
– For new hires, UNCOPE training was incorporated into the child welfare pre-service training;
– A policy statement for UNCOPE implementation procedures was released;
– Per policy, assessments are not signed off by a supervisor without an UNCOPE screening; compliance is monitored through Quality Assurance.
• DHHS implemented the universal UNCOPE screening policy and procedures effective June 30, 2006.
32
What We Accomplished• Concurrently with the screening initiative, the committee reviewed
data developed by the Muskie institute which indicated that the information reported by substance abuse professionals to DHHS was difficult to utilize in determining the implication of an individual’s relationship with substances on their ability to care for, nurture, and protect their child/children.
– The committee developed a set of assessment/evaluation and treatment status report guidelines to be used by substance abuse professionals providing clinical information to DHHS
– A training protocol for substance abuse professionals was developed
– In February 2006, a pilot training program for selected substance abuse professionals was implemented.
33
Creative Solutions We Employed to Overcome Hurdles
• Data analysis revealed a gap in screening opportunities for families who do not warrant an in-person response by CPS.
– Of all families deemed appropriate for CPS response, almost 1/3 (32.9%) were low-to-moderate risk families referred to Community Intervention Program (CIP) contract agencies.
– Almost 2/3 (64%) of families with substantiated findings had prior CIP referrals, and often multiple referrals.
– CIP agencies were not conducting UNCOPE screening on families referred for services, nor were there policy or contract provisions to do so.
34
Creative Solutions We Employed to Overcome Hurdles
• DHHS implemented UNCOPE screening in its alternative response policy and procedures– Amended DHHS policy to ensure consistency in
family assessment guidelines for families referred to CIP providers
– Amended CIP contracts to reflect those changes effective July 1, 2007.
– Developed and implemented a training for CIP supervisors that included motivational interviewing, using the UNCOPE tool, an overview of substance abuse treatment levels of care, and an orientation of local treatment resources utilizing OSA’s treatment resources website.
35
Creative Solutions We Employed to Overcome Hurdles
• Data analysis following the pilot report writing training program for substance abuse professionals indicated that a more systemic approach would be needed to provide a adequate network of substance abuse professionals ready, willing, and able to provide specialized reports to individuals screened and referred by DHHS
• Given the chance to continue with mentoring, a number of the selected substance abuse professionals in the pilot program decided not to participate. This resulted in gaps in some regions.
• The centralized mentoring component was not able to provide timely and on-going support for those substance professionals who wished to develop and maintain competency in providing these specialized reports.
36
Creative Solutions We Employed to Overcome Hurdles
• The committee has developed and created an initiative to create a state-wide network for referral, assessment and treatment utilizing agencies serving families affected by substance abuse and child abuse/neglect. The components include:
• Screening and referral
• Assessment/Evaluation Guidelines
• Comprehensive Training Model
• Rapid Access to Assessment/Evaluation and Treatment
• Collaboration
• Administration
37
Lessons Learned
• Leadership from the beginning– Legislative support
– Administrative leadership
– Involved Stakeholders
– Research and staff support
• Selecting a screening tool– There is no perfect tool.
– Don’t try to accomplish too much in your screening process; it can lead to needless work.
38
Lessons Learned
• Implementing a screening tool and field testing
• Training is crucial. Instilling a sense of buy-in is essential. If it is seen as meaningless, it will not be done. On-going training and orientation should include the UNCOPE as well as the dynamics of addiction.
• In addition to the UNCOPE, include “collateral” information in your assessment.
• Supervision makes the difference
• UNCOPE screening is incorporated into overall policy on family assessment.
• Training is mandatory for new staff members.
• Monitoring compliance is included in DHHS’s Quality Assurance Program. 39
Lessons Learned
• Having a network of qualified professionals to receive referrals and provide timely assessments/evaluations, treatment and meaningful feedback is an essential component to supporting and maintaining the DHH’S identifying and addressing substance abuse issues.
• Collaboration with empathy among systems is a necessary ingredient for developing and maintaining any meaningful change initiative
• Ideally, changes within the Child-Welfare and Substance Abuse systems should be implemented concurrently
• Anchoring and strengthening changes within existing systems for fostering “best practices” is the key to maintaining change over time. (e.g.-administrative and clinical supervision)
40
Post-IDTA: Where We’re Headed from Here
• The Child Welfare/Substance Abuse Committee has established the “shared outcome” of decreasing the length of time it takes to achieve permanency for Maine’s children. In addition to continued monitoring of UNCOPE screening, initial priorities include:
– Instituting the updated Collaborative Inter-agency agreement between DHHS and the Maine State District Court
– Data analysis to determine the number of families who fail to achieve permanency for their children due to barriers related to substance abuse.
– Developing uniform substance abuse referral, assessment, and communication protocols for child welfare clients.
– Developing a network of substance abuse treatment providers trained to better serve the needs of families involved in the child welfare system.
41
Discussion
42
1. How can multiple systems collaboratively establish priorities for achieving better outcomes for the families they mutually serve?
2. How do you sustain cross-system collaboration in the face of political climate change, budget cuts, and other factors that are outside your control?
3. What are the most important lessons you've learned to help you make the best uses of your time, energy, money and stakeholders to accomplish your goals?
4. What should jurisdictions that are seeking to develop collaborative relationships avoid in order to be successful?
How can multiple systems collaboratively establish priorities for achieving better outcomes for the families they mutually serve?
43
Get the voice of the parent included as an early step Keep issues of race and ethnicity and awareness of
disparate treatment forefront in all ongoing conversation and work Establish Common Ground through the discussion
and development of your core values and principles Storyboarding process is useful to identify points of
agreement and contention
Use the CFSR measures as a starting point of agreement for achieving outcomes together and creating your roadmapModel the collaborative behavior at the state level
that you want to see at the local level
How do you sustain cross-system collaboration in the face of political climate change, budget cuts, and other factors that are outside your control?
Focus on how far you have come and on re-energizing or re-vitalization of team relationships
Remind yourselves of the passion and original mission of the work and keep your vision looking out through the eyes of the families
Find practical ways that you can improve how you work together – change in small ways can have big benefits. What CAN you do with what you’ve got?
Stay the course and pull out your roadmap every once in a while
44
What are the most important lessons you've learned to help you make the best uses of your time, energy, money and stakeholders to accomplish your goals?
Identify accountable key staff and a lead person assigned - who is driving the vehicle at the state and local level?
Be clear about who is doing what – agreement and accountability – create a communication plan
Share Cost and staff resources
Build on your strengths
Cross train
45
What should jurisdictions that are seeking to develop collaborative relationships avoid in order to be successful?
Don’t avoid conflict relationships – acknowledge them and talk them through using solution building language – keep the discussion at a system’s perspective rather than individualizing the conflict.
Don’t fall into the Blame Game – Use the “magic word” to assure curiosity is possible and honor the absent
Don’t leave out the parent voice – involving parents greatly increases the likelihood that policies will be well informed and faithfully implemented.
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Website: www.ncsacw.samhsa.gov
Email: [email protected]
Phone: 714.505.3525
Address: 4940 Irvine Boulevard, Suite 202Irvine, CA 92620